‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia

Abstract Background Recent deaths of young Australian music festival attendees from ‘party-drug’ overdoses have sparked debate about the effectiveness of drug policies. Australia is widely lauded for its harm minimisation approach to drugs, and yet, over the last 30 years, it can be argued its polic...

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Main Author: Andrew Groves
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-04-01
Series:Harm Reduction Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12954-018-0216-z
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spelling doaj-d964eca20d404ce78b06feade64d65122020-11-24T21:51:59ZengBMCHarm Reduction Journal1477-75172018-04-0115111310.1186/s12954-018-0216-z‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in AustraliaAndrew Groves0School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Deakin UniversityAbstract Background Recent deaths of young Australian music festival attendees from ‘party-drug’ overdoses have sparked debate about the effectiveness of drug policies. Australia is widely lauded for its harm minimisation approach to drugs, and yet, over the last 30 years, it can be argued its policies have been fragmented, sometimes inconsistent and contradictory. The present article examines the root of this inconsistency, using it as a foundation to advocate for drug policy reform. In keeping with the goals of the National Drug Strategy to promote policy innovation, there is an opportunity to learn from international studies which have shown promising findings in the reduction of party-drug use and its harms through application of pill testing. Method This paper evaluates Australia’s National Drug Strategy and pill testing through a lens of pragmatism, to determine whether there is space for testing practices in contemporary policy. Specifically, the paper analyses current drug policy literature and research studies, examining a range of key drug use indicators, social and political debate and research evidence. Results The need for policy reform, attitudinal and cultural shifts and development of stronger cross-sectoral partnerships is highlighted, to ensure a rational and logical approach that genuinely tackles drug policy-making and strategy from a broad public health perspective. Conclusions Using a theoretical frame of pragmatism and drawing from national and international research evidence, this paper recommends the integration of pill testing into Australia’s harm minimisation strategy.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12954-018-0216-zPill testingHarm minimisationPragmatismAustralian drug policyParty-drug use
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew Groves
spellingShingle Andrew Groves
‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
Harm Reduction Journal
Pill testing
Harm minimisation
Pragmatism
Australian drug policy
Party-drug use
author_facet Andrew Groves
author_sort Andrew Groves
title ‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
title_short ‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
title_full ‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
title_fullStr ‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
title_full_unstemmed ‘Worth the test?’ Pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in Australia
title_sort ‘worth the test?’ pragmatism, pill testing and drug policy in australia
publisher BMC
series Harm Reduction Journal
issn 1477-7517
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Abstract Background Recent deaths of young Australian music festival attendees from ‘party-drug’ overdoses have sparked debate about the effectiveness of drug policies. Australia is widely lauded for its harm minimisation approach to drugs, and yet, over the last 30 years, it can be argued its policies have been fragmented, sometimes inconsistent and contradictory. The present article examines the root of this inconsistency, using it as a foundation to advocate for drug policy reform. In keeping with the goals of the National Drug Strategy to promote policy innovation, there is an opportunity to learn from international studies which have shown promising findings in the reduction of party-drug use and its harms through application of pill testing. Method This paper evaluates Australia’s National Drug Strategy and pill testing through a lens of pragmatism, to determine whether there is space for testing practices in contemporary policy. Specifically, the paper analyses current drug policy literature and research studies, examining a range of key drug use indicators, social and political debate and research evidence. Results The need for policy reform, attitudinal and cultural shifts and development of stronger cross-sectoral partnerships is highlighted, to ensure a rational and logical approach that genuinely tackles drug policy-making and strategy from a broad public health perspective. Conclusions Using a theoretical frame of pragmatism and drawing from national and international research evidence, this paper recommends the integration of pill testing into Australia’s harm minimisation strategy.
topic Pill testing
Harm minimisation
Pragmatism
Australian drug policy
Party-drug use
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12954-018-0216-z
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